Jump to content
Not connected, Your IP: 3.15.202.145

Staff

Staff
  • Content Count

    10724
  • Joined

    ...
  • Last visited

    ...
  • Days Won

    1799

Everything posted by Staff

  1. Hi, it seems an important link is missing, here it is: http://lobbyplag.eu/map Kind regards
  2. Hello, apparently you did not redeem your gift voucher, can you please try again (use the Redemption Code)? Kind regards
  3. Hello! Maybe not, please try to connect to port 53 UDP and port 80 TCP and compare the performance. Kind regards
  4. Hello, confirmed, it's CloudFlare that apparently blocks the whole Leaseweb. Kind regards
  5. Hello! That's normal, most ISPs which offer also POP3/IMAP/SMTP services reserve access only to their network (i.e. this is not a discrimination against AirVPN). Kind regards
  6. Hello! We checked and re-checked that GMail is perfectly accessible and works just fine from Virginis. Kind regards
  7. Hello! Is there any firewall running in your OS X? Can you also perform a test with PortListener? https://airvpn.org/topic/9315-port-forwarding-tester Kind regards
  8. Hello! The problem is in this log entry: Assuming that it's not your ISP the one blocking outgoing UDP packets, please check your network connectivity, and also check your firewall, antivirus and any packet filtering tool (including PeerGuardian, PeerBlock etc.). Make sure they do not block OpenVPN and/or outgoing UDP packets. What happens if you connect to a TCP port? Kind regards
  9. Hello, in that case your DNS queries are tunneled, of course, and then sent to Google DNS by our servers. However be informed that when you don't use our DNS you won't be able to use the following exclusive (exclusive in the sense that as far as we know no other VPN offers them) services (included in every Premium package): ICE censorship bypassgeo-IP-location based blocking (see also https://airvpn.org/forum/10-websites-support)Also you won't be able to access internal services (currently only http://speedtest.air) Kind regards
  10. Hello, probably you don't have the slightest clue about what you're saying about keys and certificates but your fears are legitimate. That's already what happens (see Diffie Hellmann negotiation in a public key infrastructure), but it does not make any difference, we still potentially can see your traffic (only the traffic without an additional encryption layer). You need partition of trust if you can't afford to trust us. If we were running a "honeypot" or anyway conducting a sinister operation, we would not be promoting partition of trust since our "birth". Please read here: https://airvpn.org/topic/54-using-airvpn-over-tor/?do=findComment&comment=1745 A practical example that opens the doors to multiple trust partitions: https://airvpn.org/tor Kind regards
  11. Hello! At the moment that test is not working at all (tested from 3 different ISPs with their DNS), maybe it requires public and open DNS. Please note, however, that the test you mention is not strictly meant to detect DNS leaks, but to provide an indication of DNS randomness/"entropy". Try this for checking DNS leaks: http://ipleak.net Kind regards
  12. Hello! 1. Yes! To ascertain the interface name, use the command ifconfig, it will list all the interfaces. Alternatively, type tun+ in the iptables rules (tun+ tells iptables to apply that rule of that chain of that table for every tun interface tun* - but if you have multiple tun interfaces this might not be what you want) 2. If the local listening port of destIP device service does not match the remotely forwarded port, then yes. In the How-To it is assumed that the service listens to the same remotely forwarded port. Warning: port remapping can NOT work with p2p clients, because the p2p client will anyway announce the local port, so the swarm peers will try to contact the p2p client on the wrong port. Kind regards
  13. Hello! 2. Correct. We also provide a Dynamic DNS service (included in every subscription, no surcharge) https://airvpn.org/topic/9314-what-is-dynamic-dns/ with a maximum of 20 names *.airdns.org. Kind regards
  14. Hello! Hello, first some clarifications from us. A port is an abstraction, a port is "open" when a process/task endpoint in an operative system is identified uniquely by an address and a 2 bytes number (this number is the port for that address). Therefore a port simply does not exist in an OS where there's no process/task endpoint matching what we call "a port" associated to an address. When such a number does not exist, the "port is closed". By extension, we also say that "a port is closed" when such an endpoint exists in the OS, but IP packets with headers that specify that endpoint are rejected/dropped by another process (typically a packet filtering tool such as a firewall). Your tests are ambiguous for two reasons: apparently from your report you have run simultaneously two processes which allegedly compete for the same endpointthe PortListener screenshot shows that the PortListener was listening to all interfacesLet's start over. First of all, we need to detemine whether the system connected to an AirVPN server receives forwarded packets from the outside or not. Make sure that no remote access tool is running. Shut it down if it's running. Connect to an Air server. Run PortListener. Make it listen to IP 10.something port 32665. Log in the web site with the same account you use to connect to an Air server, go to the Forwarded ports panel and start "Check" on port 32665. Observe the result in the PortListener and let us know. If you don't see any entry, disable any packet filtering tool (such as a firewall, PeerGuardian, PeerBlock, Malwarebytes, anything related to filtering packets, including some antivirus, Internet "security tools"...), repeat the test and let us know at your convenience. Kind regards
  15. Hello! Destination IP is the local IP address of the device running the torrent client. With Tomato routers, it will be 192.168.x.y If in doubt open a shell in the computer running the torrent client and type the command "ifconfig" (as root). Look at the IPv4 address ("inet addr") of the physical interface (for example eth0 or wlan0). In Windows the command is "ipconfig". Kind regards
  16. This. Any server/country that you reccommend we use to cause the least problems possible for you/us? Hello! The "situation" is perfectly under control. As a courtesy (absolutely not an obligation) you might evaluate to use servers in the Netherlands. Kind regards
  17. Hello! You need to implement a simple NAT on Tomato: https://airvpn.org/topic/9270-how-to-forward-ports-in-dd-wrt-tomato-with-iptables Kind regards
  18. Hello, since you get error 111 (connection refused) and not error 110 (timeout) the most probable cause is a firewall dropping packets, can you please check? Kind regards
  19. Hello, our policy did not change, we don't log, monitor or inspect our customers' or users' traffic. Kind regards
  20. Hello! 1. Yes. Special setup is required in China and Iran, see https://airvpn.org/ssh and https://airvpn.org/ssl 2. It is not logged anywhere. You need to enable sessions stats in your control panel, which by default is turned off. Log in the web site, click "Client Area" from the upper menu, click "Settings" from the left tabs, turn "Collected history and statistics about my sessions:" box from "No" to "Yes", finally click "Save settings". From that moment, every subsequent session stat (total traffic in and out, start date and time, end date and time) will be logged and will be accessible in your "Client Area". Kind regards
  21. Hello! Please see the FAQ for detailed instructions on torrent clients: https://www.airvpn.org/faq Do not hesitate to contact us for any further information. Kind regards Hi, the link above does not contain the information about setting up the utorrent. Could you update the page? Thanks Hello! It's fine. Try also this: https://airvpn.org/faq/p2p Kind regards
  22. Hello, we don't understand, can you please elaborate? Kind regards
  23. Hello! The apparent reason from Freenode (from their communications to us) is a single abuse on their IRC network from one of our nodes and our subsequent message informing them that we don't keep logs to detect the alleged abuser. Real identity protection and true, effective anonymity layer are probably the most important features of our service. The above features are not negotiable for us unless we are provided with clear proof about infringements of the ECHR, urgent matters which involve physical safety of a person etc. (see our Terms of Service) by a competent authority. We will not start logging as a consequence of a request from any private entity or from any not competent authority. Freenode therefore let us understand us that since we don't log, they would ban every AirVPN server. We did not add anything after the ban about this policy; as we said no-logging policy is not negotiable with private entities. This issue is just another hint for you about how serious and determined we are in respecting our commitments, policy and mission. Our determination in handling such issues and above all much more complicated matters is, in our opinion, comparable to the determination of several TOR exit-node operators. For example, think about the following: Freenode advertises Private Internet Access (a large VPN provider)Private Internet Access claims an absolute no logging policy: "No logging. Period." is written in their "Buy VPN" pagePrivate Internet Access nodes can access Freenode IRC servers, since the ban against AirVPN and at the time of this writingTherefore, either Private Internet Access in reality is able and willing to detect a user, start logging etc. as a consequence of a simple request by Freenode (or any other private entity), or Freenode does not enforce against Private Internet Access the same policy it enforces against non-logging VPN services such as AirVPN. We don't know, Freenode did not give us any detail about any abuse. Hopefully this message has clarified the most probable reasons. Kind regards
  24. Hello! A rogue web site might try to do that through the injection of malware via Flash, Java (not to be confused with javascript) or, if you run Internet Explorer, ActiveX; or through attempted execution of malicious Flash and Java code; or maybe through exploitation of some other vulnerable plug-in. If you browse to a web site you don't know well, the first, and strong, line of defense is preventing any script execution from the pages code. With Firefox a quick way to accomplish this is via NoScript. http://noscript.net/ Kind regards
  25. Hello, can you please perform a test with PortListener and inform us about your results at your convenience? https://airvpn.org/topic/9315-port-forwarding-tester/ Quit Plex Media server, launch PortListener and make it listen to port 32665 TCP. Then re-perform the port check from the web panel. Kind regards
×
×
  • Create New...